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New Sun server shatters speed record

53 per cent faster than Dell PowerEdge R900
Friday, 8 August 2008, 08:34

SUN MICROSYSTEMS has announced a new record-breaking speed score for its M2 server.

The Sun Fire X4600 M2 server, equipped with eight quad-Core AMD Opteron model 8360SE processors and running Solaris 10, reportedly posted an x86 score of 683,542 SPECjbb2005 bops (85,443 SPECjbb2005 bops/JVM).

According to Sun, the benchmark score proves the X4600 M2 is 53 percent faster than the Dell PowerEdge R900 and is capable of performing 75 per cent more Java business operations than the R905.

Arvie Martin, marketing manager of x64 systems at Sun, attributed the new benchmark speed to the company's “design innovation combined with AMD's fastest Quad-Core AMD Opteron processors”.

The SPECjbb2005 (Java Business Benchmark), which measures the performance of a Java-implemented application server, is designed to stress the implementation of the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) as well as the scalability of the system's processors and memory. µ

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Comments
Comparing apples to pears...

...the R900 is a quad-cord machine, so I would expect it to have only about half the power. And if you compare the Sun box with the R900 you compared Opteron to Xeon. Later the article suddenly said R905 which would be the Opteron version of the R90x - again just 4 sockets with 4x4 cores max. In my opinion both machines aim at different parts of the market or even at different markets as the R90x machines are thought for virtualization. If you want to use 'Distributed Power Management' with VMWare ESX you are probably better of with the R90x unless you run some really mean VMs on them.

posted by : Christopher Lee Thomas, 08 August 2008Complain about this comment
Where's the backstory

What no comments on what you think of this? This sounds like you copied their press release. Come on, where's the snarky comments or at least point out the holes in the article.

posted by : Drew, 08 August 2008Complain about this comment
Not expensive

Ive heard the base config is quite cheap, like 10.000 USD. Then you could add in your own pace, in total 8 quad core + 512 GB RAM. And you could just switch the CPU boards to the newer CPUs that come later. It is modularized built. For the old model (8 dual core) one of the them booted WS2003 in like 5 secs. And virtualized 30 servers with middle to high workload, without problems. Now imagine this beast with 8 quad cores instead. You could run lots of SunRay thin clients that uses 4W each, on one of these, and throw out all desktops. The SunRay has no cpu nor RAM that executes programs, everything is executed on the server. The SunRay sends input and receives bitmaps from the server. Impossible to upgrade the 249 USD SunRay. That would be lots of SunRays, running Linux or Solaris or Windows.... :o)

posted by : jocke, 08 August 2008Complain about this comment
But can anybody match it ?

The X4600 is an awesome machine, ideal as a vmware platform IMO, can any other vendor offer a 32 core machine, with 256GB in a 4U chassis? I think not

posted by : Peter, 08 August 2008Complain about this comment
How is this newsworthy?

To Christopher's point, how is a Sun 8-way beating 4-ways from Dell news? Shouldn't it scale even better than what Sun is touting? I'd like to see the cost of the Dell servers vs. the Sun..

posted by : scott, 08 August 2008Complain about this comment
Tell Me

Is Intel still using a memory controller chip that draws 20watts at idle?

posted by : Razzz, 10 August 2008Complain about this comment
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